SUSAN MARAWARR - WAK WAK
SUSAN MARAWARR
WAK WAK, 2014
205 x 65 cm
Natural Earth Pigments on Bark
PROVENANCE
Maningrida, NT
Maningrida Arts and Culture, NTCoo-ee Art Gallery, Bondi, NSW
STORY
This design depicts a sacred site at Kurrurldul, an outstation south of Maningrida.The rarrk, or abstract crosshatching, on this work represents the design for the crow totem ancestor called Djimarr. Today this being exists in the form of a rock, which is permanently submerged at the bottom of Kurrurldul Creek. The Djimarr rock in the stream at Kurrurldul is said to move around and call out in a soft hooting tone at night. Both the stone itself and the area around it are considered sacred. The imagery represents the rock mentioned above at the bottom of Kurrurldul creek, which is the final transmutation of the dreaming ancestor Djimarr. Finally, the pattern used here is also the crow design used in the sacred Mardayin ceremony, which is a large regional patri-moiety ceremony now rarely conducted in central and eastern Arnhem Land.
EXHIBITED
Perspective of Country, January 2019, Cooee Art PaddingtonWomen In Colour - International Women's Day, March 2019, Cooee Art Paddington